Big Spring Herald

NFL faces tough times for 2020, then bright economic outlook

- By BARRY WILNER AP Pro Football Writer

Let's get this straight from the outset: If the NFL has no fans at any games this season — or doesn't have much of a season at all — it will not go out of business.

Sure, the 32 teams and the league itself will lose millions, very possibly billions of dollars. Its broadcast partners will take a hit harder than any that Von Miller has delivered on the field. Same for sponsors and advertiser­s who pinpoint pro football as the best way to reach fans (read: consumers).

And unless the coronaviru­s pandemic stretches beyond the 2020 season, the NFL will come out right where it has been for decades: on top of the sports world.

"The NFL is to the sports and entertainm­ent industry the way Amazon is to the retail industry," says Marc Ganis, co-founder of Chicago-based consulting group Sportscorp and a confidant of many NFL owners.

"We need to look at this as an overarchin­g umbrella: This has a likelihood of being a one-season problem. So as we get to the 2021 season, the problem will have gone away, so it is a one-year aberration.

"There's a semi-permanent impact (on other industries) I don't see for the NFL. I see the NFL coming back stronger than ever for two reasons:

— "The value of the NFL for nonattenda­nce activity. Broadcasti­ng, gambling, Internet, video gaming, those all need the NFL more than ever before. The kinds of people and consumer activities it attracts, it will come back more strong.

— "The new CBA with the players, the 11 years of labor peace. When it was approved in March there were a host of high-profile players saying they were against it, in large measure because they didn't see a rush to do it so quickly. They were as wrong as anybody could ever be. You just don't know what tomorrow will bring, so get it done when you can get it done."

Getting done the biggest chunk of NFL revenues, new broadcast deals, is on the horizon, too. From network TV to cable to satellite to radio to streaming rights, the NFL is likely to fill its vaults with untold riches even with the overall U.S. economy struggling.

First, of course, there is the COVID-19-impacted 2020 season, and the financials won't be pretty even if the entire regular season and playoffs go off as scheduled. Certainly not with empty stadiums across the nation — less than a dozen teams are likely to have fans on hand this season, barring a turnaround in the pandemic that no one in the medical community is predicting.

If games are canceled, or the playoffs and Super Bowl need to be moved back in the calendar, the monetary effect will be substantia­l — felt perhaps the most by NFL marketing partners.

"The general consensus is nobody is completely jumping ship right now," says Mark Reino, CEO of Merit Mile, a Boca Raton, Fla.-based advertisin­g, PR and sports marketing agency.

"However, no one is signing the level of lucrative contracts they signed in previous years. They are still assessing and trying to understand how these dynamics will play out.

We are not even sure where this is going to take us. Most of us expect the NFL to play a season, but it could take a different turn.

"Naturally, corporate sponsors need that visibility to drive a lot of initiative­s ... but they're not eager to make the aggressive moves given the current situation.

"The fan base is hungry, and if the teams can figure out the right way to package up corporate sponsorshi­p value and deliver unique ideas to the advertiser­s and corporate sponsors, they will be OK. This will be a unique year, and everybody will take hits, but those who have progressiv­e thinkers likely will win. And teams with ownership interest in their stadiums will have much more opportunit­y to capitalize than those that don't."

That's a common theme.

The Dolphins, who have announced plans to have about 13,000 fans at Hard Rock Stadium for their home opener in Week 2 against Buffalo, already have gotten creative.

Owner Stephen Ross and his staff came up with an idea that met with raised eyebrows: turning the stadium into a drive-in theater.

Similar to Ganis, Reino suggests there will be other potential programs in tangential areas of sports marketing, such as gambling and online betting — once taboo in NFL circles.

"Rest assured all 32 teams have some sort of task force on how they

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St. Louis Cardinals Toronto Blue Jays Tampa Bay Rays Washington Nationals Chicago Cubs Atlanta Braves New York Mets Detroit Tigers Cleveland Indians Texas Rangers Chicago White Sox San Francisco Giants Arizona Diamondbac­ks Oakland Athletics

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San Francisco Giants New York Mets

St. Louis Cardinals Toronto Blue Jays Tampa Bay Rays Washington Nationals Chicago Cubs Atlanta Braves Detroit Tigers Cleveland Indians Texas Rangers Chicago White Sox San Diego Padres Arizona Diamondbac­ks Oakland Athletics

Away Team Boston Celtics (2) Utah Jazz (3)

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Miami Heat (1) @ Oklahoma City Thunder (3) @

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New York Islanders (3) Vancouver Canucks (2)

Away Team Colorado Avalanche (2) will monetize online betting as soon as it is approved nationwide," Reino says.

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